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ArribaAbajo

Versión original




The rape of Lucrece



First part

ArribaAbajo    From the besieged Ardea all in post,
Borne by the trustless wing of false desire,
Lust-breathed Tarquin leaves the Roman host,
And to Collatium bears the lightless fire,
Which, in pale embers hid, lurks to aspire,  5
And girdle with embracing flames the waist
Of Collatine's fair love, Lucrece the chaste.

    Haply that name of «chaste» unhappily set
This bateless edge on his keen appetite;
When Collatine unwisely did not let  10
To praise the clear unmatched red and white
Which triumph'd in that sky of his delight,
Where mortal stars, as bright as heaven's beauties,
With pure aspects did him peculiar duties.

    For he the night before, in Tarquin's tent  15
Unlock'd the treasure of his happy state;
What priceless wealth the heavens had him lent
In the possession of his beauteous mate;
Reckoning his fortune at such high-proud rate,
That kings might be espoused to more fame,  20
But king nor peer to such peerless dame.

    O happiness enjoy'd, but of a few!
And, if possess'd as soon decay'd and done
As is the morning's silver-melting dew
Against the golden splendour of the sun!  25
An expired date, cancell'd ere well begun:
Honour and beauty, in the owner's arms,
Are weakly fortress'd from a world of harms.

    Beauty itself doth of itself persuade
The eyes of men without an orator;  30
What needeth then apologies be made,
To set forth that which is so singular?
Or why Collatine the publisher
Of that rich jewel he should keep unknown
From thievish ears, because it is his own?  35

    Perchance his boast of Lucrece' sovereignty
Suggested this proud issue of a king;
For by our ears our hearts oft tainted be:
Perchance that envy of so rich a thing,
Braving compare, disdainfully did sting  40
His high-pich'd thoughts, that meaner men should vaunt
That golden hap which their superiors want.

    But some untimely thought did instigate
His all-too-timeless speed, if none of those:
His honour, his affairs, his friends, his state,  45
Neglected all, with swift intent he goes
To quench the coal which in his liver glows.
O rash-false heat, wrapp'd in repentant cold,
Thy hasty spring still blasts, and ne'er grows old!

    When at Collation this false lord arrived,  50
Well was he welcomed by the Roman dame,
Within whose face beauty and virtue strived
Which of them both should underprop her fame;
When virtue bragg'd, beauty would blush for shame;
When beauty boasted blushes, in despite  55
Virtue would stain that o'er with silver white.

    But beauty, in that white intituled,
From Venus' doves doth challenge that fir field;
Then virtue claims from beauty beauty's red,
Which virtue gave the golden age to gild  60
Their silver cheeks, and call'd it then their shield;
Teaching them thus to use it in the fight,
When shame assil'd, the red should fence the white.

    This heraldry in Lucrece' f ace was seen,
Argued by beauty's red and virtue's white;  65
Of either's colour was the other queen,
Proving from world's minority their right;
Yet their ambition makes them still to fight;
The sovereignty of either being so great,
That oft they interchange each other's seat.  70

    This silent war of lilies and of roses,
Which Tarquin view'd in her fair face's field,
In their pure ranks his traitor eye encloses;
Where, lest between hem both it should be kill'd,
The coward captive vanquished doth yield  75
To those two armies, that would let him go
Rather than triumph in so false a foe.

    Now thinks he that her husband's shallow tongue,
The niggard prodigal that praised her so,
In that high task hath done her beauty wrong,  80
Which far exceeds his barren skill to show;
Therefore that praise which Collatine doth owe
Enchanted Tarquin answers with surmise,
In silent wonder of still-gazing eyes.

    This earthly saint, adored by this devil,  85
Little suspecteth the false worshipper;
For unstain'd thoughts do seldom dream on evil;
Birds never limed no secret bushes tear:
So guiltless she securely gives good cheer
And reverend welcome to her princely guest,  90
Whose inward ill no outward harm express'd:

    For that he colour'd with his high estate,
Hiding base sin in plaits of majesty;
That nothing in him seem'd inordinate,
Save sometime too much wonder of his eye,  95
Which. having all, all could not satisfy;
But, poorly rich, so wanteth in his store,
That, cloy'd with much, he pineth still for more.

    But, she, that never coped with stranger eyes,
Could pick no meaning from their parling looks,  100
Nor read the subtle-shining secrecies
Writ in the glassy margents of such books:
She touch'd no unknown baits, nor fear'd no hooks;
Nor could she moralize his wanton sight,
More than his eyes were open'd to the light.  105

    He stories to her ears her husband's fame,
Won in the fields of fruitful Italy;
And decks with praises Collatine's high name,
Made glorious by his manly chivalry
With bruised arms and wreaths of victory:  110
Her joy with heaven-up hand she doth express,
And wordless so greets heaven for his success.

    Far from the purpose of his coming hither,
He makes excuses for his being there:
No cloudy show of stormy blustering weather  115
Doth yet in his fair welkin once appear;
Till sable Night, mother of dread and fear,
Upon the world dim darkness doth display,
And in her vaulty prison stows the day.

    For then is Tarquin brought unto his bed,  120
Intending weariness with heavy spright;
For after supper long he questioned
With modest Lucrece, and wore out the night;
Now leaden slumber with life's strength doth fight
And every one to rest themselves betake,  125
Save thieves and cares and troubled minds that wake.

    As one of which doth Tarquin lie revolving
The sundry dangers of his will's obtaining;
Yet ever to obtain his will resolving,
Though weak-built hopes persuade him to abstaining;  130
Despair to gain doth traffic oft for gaining,
And when great treasure is the meed proposed,
Though death be adjunct, there's no death supposed.

    Those that much covet are with gain so fond
That what they have not, that which they posses,  135
They scatter and unloose it from their bond,
And so, by hoping more, they have but less;
Or, gaining more, the profit of excess
Is but to surfeit, and such griefs sustain,
That they prove bankrupt in this poor-rich gain.  140

    The aim of all is but to nurse the life
With honour, wealth and ease, in waning age;
And in this aim there is such thwarting strife
That one for all or all for one we gage;
As life for honour in fell battle's rage;  145
Honour for wealth; and oft that wealth doth cost
The death of all, and all together lost.

    So that in venturing ill we leave to be
The things we are for that which we expect;
And this ambitious foul infirmity,  150
In having much, torments us with defect
Of that we have: so then we do neglect
The thing we have, and, all for want of wit,
Make something nothing by augmenting it.

    Such hazard now must doting Tarquin make,  155
Pawning his honour to obtain his lust;
And for himself himself he must forsake:
Then where is truth, if there be no self-trust?
When shall he think to find a stranger just,
When he himself himself confounds, betrays  160
To slanderous tongues and wretched hateful days?

    Now stole upon the time the dead of night,
When heavy sleep had closed up mortal eyes:
No comfortable star did lend his light,
No noise but owls'and wolves'death-boding cries;  165
Now serves the season that they may surprise
The silly lambs: pure thoughts are dead and still,
While lust and murder wakes to stain and kill.

    And now this lusful lord leap'd from his bed,
Throwing his mantle rudely o'er his arm;  170
Is madly toss'd between desire and dread;
Th'one sweetly flatters, th'other feareth harm;
But honest fear, betwitch'd with lust's foul charm,
Doth too too oft betake him to retire,
Beaten aeay by braind-stick rude desire.  175

    His falchion on a flint he softly smiteth,
That from the cold stone sparks of fire do fly;
Whereat a waxen torch forthwith he lighteth,
Which must be lode-star to his lustful eye;
And to the flame thus speaks advisedly:  180
«As from this cold tint I enforced this fire,
So Lucrece must I force to my desire.»

    Here pale with fear he doth premeditate
The dangers of his loathsome enterprise,
And in his inward mind he doth debate  185
What following sorrow may on this arise:
Then looking scornfully he doth despise
His naked armour of still-slaughter'd lust,
And justly thus controls his thoughts unjust:

    Fair torch, burn out thy light, and lend it not  190
To darken her whose light excelleth thine:
And die, unhallow'd thoughts, before you blot
With your uncleanness that which is divine:
Offer pure incense to so pure a shrine;
Let fair humanity abhor the deed  195
That spots and stains love's modest snow-white weed.

    O shame to knighthood and to shining arms!
O foul dishonour to my household's grave!
Oh impious act, including all foul harms!
A martial man to be soft fancy's slave!  200
True valour still a true respect should have;
Then my digression is so vile, so base,
That it will live engraven in my face.

    Yea, though I die, the scandal will survive
And be an eye-sore in my golden coat;  205
Some loathsome dash the herald will contrive,
To cipher me how fondly I did dote;
That my posterity, shamed with the note,
Shall curse my bones, and hold it for no sin
To wish that I their father had not bin.  210

    What win I, if I gain the thing I seek?
A dream, a breath, a froth of fleeting joy.
Who buys a minute's mirth to wail a week?
Or sells eternity to get a toy?
For one sweet grape who will the vine destroy?  215
Or what fond beggar, but to touch the crown,
Would with the sceptre straight be strucken down?

    If Collatinus dream of my intent,
Will he not wake, and in a desperate rage
Post hither, this vile purpose to prevent?  220
This siege that hath engirt his marriage,
This blur to youth, this sorrow to the sage,
This dying virtue, this surviving shame,
Whose crime will bear an ever-during blame.

    O what excuse can my invention make,  225
When thou shalt charge me with so black a deed?
Will not my tongue be mute, my frail joints shake,
Mine eyes forgo their light, my false heart bleed?,
The guilt being great, the fear doth still exceed;
And extreme fear can neither fight nor fly,  230
But coward-like with trembling terror die.

    Had Collatinus kill'd my son or sire
Or lain in ambush to betray my life,
Or were he not my dear friend, this desire
Might have excuse to work upon his wife,  235
As in revenge or quittal of such strife:
But as he is my kinsman mi dear friend,
The shame and fault finds no excuse nor end.

    Shameful it is; ay, if the fact be known:
Hateful it is; there is no hate in loving;  240
I'll beg her love; but she is not her own;
The worst is but denial and reproving;
My will is strong, past reason's weak removing;
Who fears a sentence or an old man's saw
Shall by a painted cloth be kept in awe.  245

    Thus graceless holds he disputation
Tween frozen conscience and hot-burning will,
And with good thoughts makes dispensation,
Urging the worser sense for vantage still;
Which in a moment doth confound and kill  250
All pure effects, and doth so far proceed
That what is vile shows like a virtuous deed.

    Quoth he, «she took me kindly by the hand,
And gazed for tidings in my eager eyes,
Fearing some hard news from the warlike band,  255
Where her beloved Collatinus lies.
O, how her fear did make her colour rise!
First red as roses that on lawn we lay,
Then white as lawn, the roses took away.

    And how her hand, in my hand being lock'd,  260
Forced it to tremble with her loyal fear!
Which struck her sad, and then it faster rock'd,
Until her husband's welfare she did head;
Whereat she smiled with so sweet a cheer
That had Narcissus seen her as she stood  265
Self-love had never drown'd him in the flood.

    Why hunt I them for colour or excuses?
All orators are dumb when beauty pleadeth;
Poor wretches have remorse in poor abuses;
Love thrives not in the heart that shadows dreadeth:  270
Affection is my captain, and he leadeth;
And when his gaudy banner is display'd,
The coward fights, and will not be dismay'd.

    Then, childish fear avaunt! debating die!
Respect and reason wait on wrinkled age!  275
My heart shall never countermand mine eye;
Sad pause and deep regard beseems the sage;
My part is youth, and beats these from the stage:
Desire my pilot is, beauty my price;
Then who fears sinking where such treasure lies?»  280

    As corn overgrown by weeds, so heedful fear
Is almost choked by unresisted lust.
Away he steals with open listening ear,
Full of foul hope and full of fond mistrust;
Both which, as servitors to the unjust,  285
So cross him with their opposite persuasion,
That now he vows a league, and now invasion.

    Within his thought her heavenly image sits,
And in the self-same seat sits Collatine:
That eye which looks on her confounds his wits;  290
That eye which him beholds, as more divine,
Unto a view so false will not incline;
But with a pure appeal seeks to the heart,
Which once corrupted takes the worser part;

    And therein heartens up his servile powers,  295
Who, flatter'd by their leader's jocund show,
Stuff up his lust, as minutes fill up hours;
And as their captain, so their pride doth grow,
Paying more slavish tribute than they owe.
By reprobate desire thus madly led,  300
The Roam lord marcheth to Lucrece' bed.

    The locks between her chamber and his will,
Each one by him enforced, retires his ward;
But, as they open, they all rate his ill,
Which drives the creeping thief to some regard:  305
The threshold grates the door to have him heard;
Night-wandering weasels shriek to see him there;
They fright him, yet he still pursues his fear.

    As each unwilling portal yields him way,
Through little vents and crannies of the place  310
The wind wars with his torch to make him stay,
And blows the smoke of it into his face,
Extinguishing his conduct in this case;
But his hot heart, which fond desire doth scorch,
Puffs forth another wind that fires he torch:  315

    And being lighted, by the light he spies
Lucretia's glove, wherein her needle sticks:
He takes if from the rushes where it lies.
And griping it, the needle his finger pricks;
As who should say: «This glove to wanton tricks  320
Is not inured; return again in haste;
Thou see'st our mistress' ornaments are chaste.»

    But all these poor forbiddings could not stay him;
He in the worst sense construes their denial;
The doors, the wind, the glove, hat did delay him,  325
He takes for accidental things of trial;
Or as those which stop the hourly dial,
Who with a lingering stay his course doth let,
Till every minute pays the hour his debt.

    «So, so» quoth he, «these lets attend the time,  330
Like little frosts that sometime threat the spring,
To add a more rejoicing to the prime,
And give the sneaped birds more cause to sing.
Pain pays the income of each precious thing;
Huge rocks, high winds, strong pirates, shelves and sands,  335
The merchant fears, ere rich at home he lands.»

    Now is he come unto the chamber door,
That shuts him from the heaven of his tought,
Which with a yielding latch, and with no more,
Hath barr'd him from the blessed thing he sought.  340
So from himself impiety hath wrought,
That for his prey to pray he doth begin,
As if the heaven should countenance his sin.

    But in the midst of his unfruitful prayer,
Having solicited the eternal power  345
That his foul thoughts might compass his fair fair,
And they would stand auspicious to the hour,
Even there he stars: quoth he, I must deflower:
The powers to whom I pray abhor this fact;
How can they assist me in the act?  350

    The Love and Fortune be my gods, my guide!
My will is back'd with resolution:
Thoughts are but dreams till their effects be tried;
The blackest sin is clear'd with absolution;
Against love' fire fear's frost hath dissolution.  355
The eye of heaven is out, and misty night
Covers the shame that follows sweet delight.»

    This said, his guilty hand pluck'd up the latch,
And with his knee the door he opens wide.
The dove sleeps fast that this night-owl will catch;  360
Thus treason works ere traitors be espied.
Who sees the lurking serpent steps aside;
But she, sound sleeping, fearing no such thing,
Lies at the mercy of his mortal sting.

    Into the chamber wickedly he stalks  365
And gazed on her yet unstained bed.
The curtains being close, about he walks,
Rolling his greedy eyeballs in his head:
By their high treason is his heart misled;
Which gives the watch-word to his hand full soon  370
To draw the cloud that hides the silver moon.

    Look, as the fair and fiery-pointed sun,
Rushing from forth a cloud, bereaves our sight;
Even so, the curtain drawn, his eyes begun
To wink, being blinded with a greater light;  375
Whether it is that she reflects so bright,
That dazzleth them, or else some shame supposed;
But blind they are, and keeps themselves enclosed.

    O, had they in that darksome prison died!
Then had they seen the period of the ill;  380
Then Collatine again, by Lucrece' side
In his clear bed might have reposed still:
But they must ope, this blessed league to kill;
And holy-thoughted Lucrece to their sight
Must sell her joy, her life, her world's delight.  385

    Her lily hand her rosy cheek lies under,
Cozening the pillow of a lawful kiss;
Who, therefore angry, seems to part in sunder,
Swelling on either side to want his bliss;
Between whose hills her head entombed is:  390
Where, like a virtuous monument, she lies,
To be admired of lewd unhallow'd eyes.

    Without the bed other fait hand was,
On the green coverlet; whose perfect white
Show'd like an April daisy on the grass,  395
With pearly sweat, resembling dew of night.
Her eyes, like marigolds, had sheathed their light,
And canopied in darkness sweetly lay,
Till they might open to adorn the day.

    Her hair, like golden threads, play'd with her breath;  400
modest wantons! wanton modesty!
Showing life's triumph in the map of death,
And death's dim look in life's mortality:
Each in her sleep themselves so beauty
As if between them twain there were no strife,  405
But that life lived in death and death in life.

    Her breasts, like ivory globes circle with blue,
A pair of maiden worlds unconquered,
Save of their lord no bearing yoke they knew,
And him by oath they truly honoured.  410
These worlds in Tarquin new ambition bred;
Who, like a foul usurper, went about
From this fair throne to heaven the owner out.

    What could he see but mightily he noted?
What did he note but strongly he desired?  415
What he beheld, on that he firmly doted,
And in his will his wilful eye he tired.
With more than admiration he admired
Her azure veins, her alabaster skin.
Her coral lips, her snow-white dimpled chin.  420

    As the grim lion fawneth o'er his prey,
So o'er sleeping soul doth Tarquin stay,
Sharp hunger by the conquest satisfied,
His rage of lust by gazing qualified;
Slack'd, not suppress'd for standing by her side,  425
His eye, which late this mutiny restrains,
Unto a greater uproar temps his veins:

    And they, like straggling slaves for pillage fighting,
Obdurate vassals fell exploits effecting
In bloody death and ravishment delighting,  430
Nor children's tears nor mother's groans despecting,
Swell in their pride, the onset still expecting:
Anon his beating heart, alarum striking,
Gives the hot charge, and bids them do their liking

    His drumming heart cheers up his burning eye,  435
His eye commends the leading to his hand;
His hand, as proud of such a dignity,
Smoking with pride, march'd on to make his stand
On her bare breast, the heart of all her land;
Whose ranks of blue veins, as his hand did scale,  440
Left their round turrets destitute and pale.

    They, mustering the quiet cabinet
Where their dear governess and lady lies,
Do tell her she is dreadfully beset,
And fright her with confusion of their cries;  445
She, much amazed, breaks ope her lock'd-up eyes,
Who, peeping forth this tumult to behold,
Are by his flaming torch dimm'd and controll'd.

    Imagine her as one in dead of night
From forth dull sleep by dreadful fancy waking,  450
That thinks she hath beheld some ghastly sprite.
Whose grim aspect sets every joint a-shaking;
What terror'tis! but she, in worser taking,
From sleep disturbed, heedfully doth view
The sight which makes supposed terror true.  455

    Wrapp'd and confounded in a thousand fears,
Like to a new-kill'd bird she trembling lies;
She dares not look; yet, winking, there appears
Quick-shifting antics, ugly in her eyes:
Such shadows are the weak brain's forgeries;  460
Who, angry that the eyes fly from their lights,
In darkness daunts them with more dreadful sights.

    His hand, that yet remains upon her breast,-
Rude ram, to batter such an ivory wall!-
May feel her heart, poor citizen! distress'd,  465
Wounding itself to death, rise up and fall,
Beating her bulk, that his hand shakes withal.
This moves in him more rage and lesser pity,
To make the breach and enter this sweet city.

    First, like a trumpet, doth his tongue begin  470
To sound a parley to his heartless foe;
Who oér the white sheet peers her whiter chin,
The reason of this rash alarm to know,
Which he by dumb demeanour seeks to show;
But she with vehement prayers urgeth still  475
Under what colour he commits this ill.

    Thus he replies: «The colour in thy face,
That even for anger makes the lily pale
And the red rose blush at her own disgrace,
Shall plead for me and tell my loving tale:  480
Under that colour am I come to scale
Thy never-conquer'd fort: the fault is thine,
For those thine eyes betray thee unto mine.

    Thus I forestall thee, if thou mean to chide.
Thy beauty hath ensnared thee to this night,  485
Where thou with patience must my will abide;
My will that marks thee for my earth's delight,
Which I to conquer sought with all my might;
But as reproof and reason beat it dead,
By thy bright beauty was it newly bred.  490

    I see what crosses my attempt will bring;
I know what thorns the growing rose defends;
I think the honey guarded with a sting;
All this beforehand counsel comprehends:
But will is deaf and hears no heedful friends;  495
Only he hath an eye to gaze on beauty,
And dotes on what he looks, against law or duty.

    I have debated, even in my soul,
What wrong, what shame, what sorrow I shall breed;
But nothing can affection's course control,  500
Or stop the headlong fury of his speed.
I know repentant tears ensue the deed,
Reproach, disdain and deadly enmity;
Yet strive I to embrace mine infamy.»

    This said, he shakes aloft his Roman blade,  505
Which, like a falcon towering in the skies,
Coucheth the fowl below with his wings' shade,
Whose crooked beak threats if he mount he dies;
So under his insulting falchion lies
Harmless Lucretia, marking what he tells  510
With trembling fear, as fowl hear falcon's bells.

    «Lucrece» quoth he, «this night I must enjoy thee;
If thou deny, then force must work my way,
For in thy bed I purpose to destroy thee:
That done, some worthless slave of mine I'll slay,  515
To kill thine honour with thy life's decay;
And in thy dead arms do I mean to place him,
Swearing I slew him, seeing thee embrace him.

    So thy surviving husband shall remain
The scornful mark of every open eye;  520
Thy kinsmen hang their heads at this disdain,
Thy issue blurr'd with nameless bastardy:
And thou, the author of their obloquy
Shalt have thy trespass cited up in thymes
And sung by children in succeeding times.  525

    But if thou yield, I rest thy secret friend:
The fault unknown is as a thought unacted;
A little harm done to a great good end
For lawful policy remains enacted.
The poisonous simple sometime is compacted  530
In a pure compound; being so applied,
His venom in effect is purified

    Then, for thy husband and thy children's sake,
Tender my suit: bequeath not to their lot
The shame that from them no device can take,  535
The blemish that will never be forgot;
Worse than a slavish wipe or mirth-hour's blot:
For marks descried in men's nativity
Are nature's faults, not their own infamy.»


Second part

    Here with a cockatrice' dead-killing eye  540
He rouseth up himself, and makes a pause;
While she, the picture of true piety,
Like a white hind under the gripe's sharp claws,
Pleads, in a wilderness where are no laws,
To the rough beats that knows no gentle right,  545
No aught obeys but his foul appetite.

    But when a black-faced cloud the world doth threat,
In his dim mist the aspiring mountains hiding,
From earth's dark womb some gentle gust doth get,
Which blows these pitchy vapours from their biding,  550
Hindering their present fall by this dividing;
So his unhallow'd haste her words delays,
And moody Pluto winks Orpheus plays.

    Yet, foul night-waking vat, he doth but dally,
While in his hold-fast foot the weak mouse panteht:  555
Her sad behaviour feeds his vulture folly,
A swallowing gulf that even in plenty wanteth;
His ear her prayers admits, but his heart granteth
No penetrable entrance to her plaining:
Tears harden lust, though marble wear with raining.  560

    Her pity-pleading eyes are sadly fixed
In the remorseless wrinkles of his face;
Her modest eloquence with sighs is mixed,
Which to her oratory adds more grace.
She puts the period often from his place,  565
And midst the sentence so her accent breaks
That twice she doth begin ere once she speaks.

    She conjures him by high almighty Jove,
By kinghood, gentry, and sweet friendship's oath,
By her untimely tears, her husband's love,  570
By holy human law and common troth,
By heaven and earth, and all the power of both,
That to his borrow'd bed he make retire,
And stoop to honour, not to foul desire.

    Quoth she: «Reward not hospitality  575
With such black payment as thou hast pretended;
Mud not the fountain that gave drink to thee;
Mar not the tring that cannot be amended;
End thy ill aim before thy shoot be ended;
He is no woodman that doth bend his bow  580
To strike a poor unseasonable doe.

    My husband is thy friend; for his sake spare me;
Thyself art mighty; for thine own sake leave me:
Myself a weakling; do not then ensnare me;
Thou look'st not like deceit; do not deceive me.  585
My sight, like whirlwinds, labour hence to heave thee:
If ever man were moved with woman's moans,
Be moved with my tears, my sight, my groans.

    All which together, like a troubled ocean,
Beat at thy rocky and wreck-threatening heart,  590
To soften it with their continual motion;
For stones dissolved to water do convert.
O, if no harder than a stone thou art,
Melt at tears, and be compassionate!
Soft pity enters at an iron gate.  595

    In Tarquin's likeness I did entertain thee:
Hast thou put on his shape to do him shame?
To all the host of heaven I complain me,
Thou wrong'st his honour, wound'st his princely name.
Thou art not what thou seem'st; and if the same,  600
Thou seem'st not what thou art, a good, a king;
For kings, like gods, should govern every thing.

    How will thy shame be seeded in thine age,
When thus thy vices bud before thy spring!
If in thy hope thou darest do such outrage,  605
What darest thou not when once thou art a king?
O, be remember'd, no outrageous thing
From vassal actors can be wiper away;
Then king's misdeeds cannot be hid in clay.

    This deed will make thee only loved for fear;  610
But happy monarchs still are fear'd for love:
With foul offenders thou perforce must bear,
When they in thee the like offences prove:
If but for fear of this, thy will remove;
For princes are the glass, the school, the book,  615
Where subjects' eyes do learn, do read, do look.

    And wilt thou be the school where Lust shall lean?
Must he in thee read lectures of such shame?
Wilt thou be glass wherein it shall discern
Authority for sin, warrant for blame,  620
To privilege dishonour in thy name?
Thou back'st reproach against long-livin laud,
And makest fair reputation but a bawd.

    Hast thou command? by him that gave it thee,
From a pure heart command thy rebel will:  625
Draw not thy sword to guard iniquity,
For it was lent thee all that brood to kill.
Thy princely office how canst thou fulfil,
When, pattern'd by thy fault, foul sin may say
He learn'd sin and thou didst teach the way?  630

    Think but how vile a spectacle it were,
To view thy present trespass in another.
Man's faults do seldom to themselves appear;
Their own transgressions partially they smother:
This guilt would seem death-worthy in thy brother  635
O, how are they wrapp'd in with infamies
That from their own misdeeds askance their eyes!

    To thee, to thee, my heaved-up hands appeal,
Not to seducing lust, thy rash relier:
I sue for exiled majesty's repeal;  640
Let him return, and flattering thoughts retire:
His true respect will prison false desire,
And wipe the dim mist from thy doting eyne,
That thou shalt see thy state and pity mine.»

    «Have done» quoth he: «my uncontrolled tide  645
Turns not, but swells the higher by this let.
Small lights are soon blown out, huge fires abide,
And with the wind in greater fury fret:
The petty streams that pay a daily debt
Tot their salt sovereign, with their fresh falls' haste  650
Add to his flow, but alter not his taste.»

    «Thou art» quoth she, «a sea, sovereign king;
And, lo, there falls into thy boundless flood
Black lust, dishonour, shame, misgoverning,
Who seek to stain the ocean of thy blood.  655
If all these petty ills shall charge thy good,
Thy sea within a puddle's womb is hearsed,
And not the puddle in thy sea dispersed.

    So shall these slaves be king, and thou their slave;
Thou nobly base, they basely dignified;  660
Thou their fair life, and they thy fouler grave:
Thou loathed in their shame, they in thy pride:
The lesser thing should not the greater hide;
The cedar stoops not to the base shrub's foot,
But low shrubs wither at the cedar's root.  665

    So let thy thoughts, low vassals to thy state.»-
«No more» quoth he; «by heaven, I will not hear thee:
Yield to my love; if not, enforced hate,
Instead of love's coy touch, shall rudely tear thee:
That done, despitefully I mean to bear thee  670
Unto the base bed of some rascal groom,
To be thy partner in this shameful doom.»

    This said, he sets his foot upon the light,
For light and lust are deadly enemies:
Shame folded up in blind concealing night,  675
When most unseen, then most doth tyrannize.
The wolf hath seized his prey, the poor lamb cries,
Till with her own white fleece her voice controll'd
Entombs her outcry in her lips' sweet fold:

    For with the nightly linen that she wears  680
He pens her piteous clamours in her head,
Cooling his hot face in the chastest tears
That ever modest eyes with sorrow shed.
O, that prone lust should stain so pure a bed!
The spots whereof could weeping purify,  685
Her tears should drop on them perpetually.

    But she lost a dearer thing than life,
And he hath won what he would lose again:
This forced league doth force a further strife;
This momentary joy breeds months of pain;  690
This hot desire converts to cold disdain:
Pure Chastity is rifled of her store,
And Lust, the thief, far poorer than before.

    Look, as the full-fed hound or gorged hawk,
Unapt for tender smell or speedy flight,  695
Make slow pursuit, or altogether balk
The prey wherein by nature they delight,
So surfeit-taking Tarquin fares this night:
His taste delicious, in digestion souring,
Devours his will, that lived by foul devouring.  700

    O, deeper sin than bottomless conceit
Can comprehend in still imagination!
Drunken Desire must vomit his receipt,
Ere he can see his own abomination.
While Lust is in his pride, no exclamation  705
Can curb his heat or rein his rash desire,
Till, like a jade, Self-will himself doth tire.

    And then with lank and lean discolour'd cheek,
With heavy eye, knit brow, and strengthless pace,
Feeble Desire, all recreant, poor and meek,  710
Like to a bankrupt beggar wails his case:
The flesh being proud, Desire doth figth with Grace,
For there it revels, and when that decays
The guilty rebel for remission prays.

    So fares it with this faultful lord of Rome,  715
Who this accomplishment so hotly chased;
For now against himself he sounds this doom,
That through the length of times he stands disgrace:
Besides, his soul's fair temple is defaced,
To whose weak ruins muster troops of cares,  720
Ti ask the spotted princess how she fares.

    She says, her subjects with foul insurrection
Have batter'd down her consecrated wall,
And by their mortal fault brought in subjection
Her immortality, and made her thrall  725
To living death and pain perpetual:
Which in her prescience she controlled still,
But her foresight could not forestall their will.

    Even in this though through the dark night he stealeth,
A captive victor that hath lost in gain;  730
Bearing away the wound that nothing healeth,
The scar that will, despite of cure, remain;
Leaving his spoil perplex's in greater pain.
She bears the load of lust he left behind,
And he the burthen of a guilty mind.  735

    He like a thievish dog creeps sadly thence;
She like a wearied lamb lies panting there;
He scowls, and hates himself for his offence;
She, desperate, with her nails her flesh doth tear;
He faintly flies, sweating with guilty fear;  740
She stays, exclaiming on the direful night;
He runs, and chides his vanish'd, loathed delight.

    He thence departs a heavy convertite;
She there remains a hopeless cast-away;
He in his speed looks for the morning light;  745
She prays she never my behold the day,
«For day», quoth she, «night's scapes doth open lay,
And my true eyes have never practised how
To cloak offences with a cunning brow.

    They think not but that every eye can see  750
The same disgrace which they themselves behold;
And therefore would they still in darkness be,
To have their unseen sin remain untold;
For they their guilt with weeping will unfold,
And grave, like water that doth eat in steel,  755
Upon my cheeks helpless shame I feel.»

   Here she exclaims against repose and rest,
And bids her eyes hereafter still be blind.
She wakes her heart by beating on her breast,
And bids it leap from thence, where it may find  760
Some purer chest to close so pure a mind.
Frantic with grief thus breathes she forth her spite
Against the unseen secrecy of night:

    «O comfort-killing Night, image of hell!
Dim register and notary of shame!  765
Black stage for tragedies and murders fell!
Vast sin-concealing chaos! nurse of blame!
Blond muffled bawd! dark harbour for defame!
Grim cave of death! whispering conspirator
With close-tongued treason and the ravisher!  770

    O hateful, vaporous and foggy Night!
Since thou art guilty of my cureless crime,
Muster thy mists to meet the eastern light,
Make war against proportion'd course of time;
Or if thou wilt permit the sun to climb  775
His wonted height, yet ere he go to bed,
Knit poisonous clouds about his golden head.

    With rotten damps ravish the morning air;
Let their exhaled unwholesome breaths make sick
The life of purity, the supreme fait,  780
Ere he arrive his weary noon-tide prick;
And let thy misty vapours march so thick
That in their smoky ranks his smother'd light
May set at noon and make perpetual night.

    Were Tarquin Night, as he is but Night's child,  785
The silver-shining queen he would distain;
Her twinkling handmaids too, by him defiled,
Through Night's black bosom should not peep again:
So should I have co-partners in my pain;
And fellowship in woe doth woe assuage,  790
As palmers' chat makes short their pilgrimage.

    Where now I have no one to blush with me,
To cross their arms and hang their heads with mine,
To mask their brows and hide their infamy;
But I alone must sit and pine,  795
Seasoning the earth with showers of silver brine,
Mingling my talk with tears, my grief with groans,
Poor wasting monuments of lasting moans.

    O, Night, thou furnace of foul-reeking smoke,
Let not the jealous Day behold that face  800
Which underneath thy black all-hiding cloak
Immodestly martyr'd with disgrace!
Keep still possession of thy gloomy place,
That all the faults which in thy reign are made
May likewise be sepulchred in thy shade!  805

   Make me not object to the tell-tale Day!
The light will show, character'd in my brow,
The story of sweet chastity's decay,
The impious breach of holy wedlock vow:
Yea, the illiterate, that know not how  810
To cipher what is writ in learned books,
Will quote my loathsome trespass in my looks.

    The nurse, to still her child, will tell my story,
And fright her crying babe with Tarquin's name;
The orator, to deck his oratory,  815
Will couple my reproach to Tarquin's shame;
Feast-finding minstrels, tuning my defame,
Will tie the hearers to attend each line,
How Tarquin wronged me, I Collatine.

    Let my good name, that senseless reputation,  820
For Collatine's dear love be kept unspotted:
If that he made a theme for disputation,
The branches of another root are rotted,
And undeserved reproach to him allotted
That is as clear from this attaint of mine  825
As I, ere this, was pure to Collatine.

    O unseen shame! invisible disgrace!
O unfelt sore! crest-wounding, private scar!
Reproach is stamp'd in Collatinus' face,
And Tarquin's eye may read the mot afar,  830
How he in peace is wounded, not in war.
Alas, how many bear such shameful blows,
Which not themselves, but he that gives them knows!

    If, Collatine, thine honour lay in me,
From me by strong assault it is bereft.  835
My honey lost, and I, a drone-like bee,
Have no perfection of my summer left,
But robb'd and ransack'd by injurious theft;
In thy weak hive a wandering wasp hath crept,
And suck'd the honey which thy chaste bee kept.  840

    Yet am I guilty of thy honour's wrack;
Yet for thy honour did I entertain him;
Coming from thee, I could not put him back,
For it had been dishonour to disdain him,
Besides of weariness he did complain him,  845
And talk'd of virtue: O unlook'd-for evil,
When virtue is profaned in such a devil!

    Why should the worm intrude the maiden bud?
Or hateful cuckoos hatch in sparrows' nests?
Or toads infect fair founts with venom mud?  850
Or tyrant folly lurk in gentle breasts?
Or kings be breakers of their own behests?
But no perfection is so absolute
That some impurity doth not pollute.

    The aged man that coffers up his fold  855
Is plagued with cramps and gouts and painful fits,
And scarce hath eyes his treasure to behold,
But like still-pining Tantalus he sits
And useless barns the harvest of his wits,
Having no other pleasure of his gain  860
But torment that it cannot cure his pain.

    So then he hath it when he cannot use it,
And leaves it to be masterd'd by his young;
Who in their pride do presently abuse it;
Ther father was too weak, and they too strong,  865
To hold their cursed-blessed fortune long.
The sweets we wish for turn to loathed sours
Even in the moment that we call them ours.

    Unruly blasts wait on the tender spring;
Unwholesome weeds take root with precious flowers;  870
The adder hisses where the sweet birds sing;
What virtue breeds iniquity devours:
We have no good that we can say is ours,
But ill-annexed Opportunity
Or kills his life or else his quality.  875

    O Opportunity, thy guilt is great!
Tis thou that executest the traitor's treason;
Thou set'st the wolf where he the lamb may get;
Whoever plots the sin, thou point'st the season;
Tis thou that spurn'st at right, at law, at reason;  880
And in thy shady cell, where none may spy him,
Sits Sin, to seize the souls that wander by him.

    Thou makest the vestal violate her oath;
Thou blow'st the fire when temperance is thaw'd;
Thou smother honesty, thou munder'st troth;  885
Thou foul abettor! thou notorious bawd!
Thou plantest scandal and displacest laud:
Thou ravisher, thou traitor, thou false thief,
Thy honey turns to gall, thy to grief!

    Thy secret pleasure turns to open shame,  890
Thy private feasting to a public fast,
Thy smoothing titles to a ragged name,
Thy sugar'd tongue to bitter wormwood taste;
Thy violent vanities can never last.
How comes it then, vile Opportunity,  895
Being so bad, such numbers seek for thee?

    When wilt thou be the humble suppliant's friend,
And bring him where his suit may be obtained?
When wilt thou sort an hour great strifes to end?
Or free that soul which wretchedness hath chained?  900
Give physic to the sick, ease to the pained?
The poor, lame, blind, halt, creep, cry out for thee
But they ne'er meet with Opportunity.

    The patient dies while the physician sleeps;
The orphan pines while the oppressor feeds;  905
Justice is feasting while the widow weeps;
Advice is sporting while infection breeds:
Thou grant'st no time for charitable deeds:
Wrath, envy, treason rape, and munder's rages,
Thy heinous hours wait on them as their pages.  910

    When Truth and Virtue have to do with thee,
A thousand crosses keep them from thy aid:
They buy thy help, bur Sin ne'er gives a fee;
He gratis comes, and thou art well appaid
As well to hear as grant what he hath said.  915
My Collatine would else have come to me
When Tarquin did, but he was stay'd by thee.

    Guilty thou art of munder and of theft,
Guilty perjury and subornation,
Guilty treason, forgery and shift,  920
Guilty of incest, that abomination
An accessary by thine inclination
To all sins past and all that are to come
From the creation to the general doom.

    Mis-shapen Time, copesmate of ugly Night,  925
Swift subtle post, carrier of grisly care,
Eater of youth, false slave to false delight,
Base watch of woes, sin's pack-horse, virtue's snare
Thou nursest all and murder'st all that are:
O, hear me them, injurious, shifting Time!  930
Be guilty of my death, since of my crime.

    Why hath thy servant Opportunity
Betray'd the hours thou gavest me to repose,
Cancell'd my fortunes and enchained me
To endless date of never-ending woes?  935
Time's office is to fine the hate of foes,
To eat up errors by opinion bred,
Not spend the dowry of a lawful bed.

    Time's glory is to calm contending kings,
To unmask falsehood and bring truth to light,  940
To stamp the seal of mine in aged things,
To wake the morn and sentinel the night,
To wrong the wronger till render right,
To ruinate proud buildings with thy hours,
And smear with dust their glittering golden towers;  945

    To fill with worm-holes stately monuments,
To feed oblivion with decay of things,
To blot old books and alter their contents,
To pluck the quills from ancient ravens' wings,
To dry the old oak's sap and cherish springs  950
To spoil antiquities of hammer'd steel
And turn the giddy round of Fortune's wheel;

    To show the beldam daughters of her daughter,
To make the child a man, the man a child,
To slay the tiger that doth live by slaughter,  955
To tame the unicorn and lion wild!
To mock the subtle in themselves beguiled,
To cheer the ploughman with increaseful crops,
And waste stones with little water-drops.

    Why work'st thou mischief in thy pilgrimage,  960
Unless thou couldst return to make amends?
One poor retiring minute in an age
Would purchase thee a thousand friends,
Lending him wit that to bad debtors lends:
O, this dread night, wouldst thou one hour come back,  965
I could prevent this storm and shun thy wrack!

    Thou ceaseless lackey to eternity,
With some mischance cross Tarquin in his flight:
Devise extremes beyond extremity,
To make him curse this cursed crimeful night;  970
Let ghastly shadows his lewd eyes affright,
And the dire thought of his committed evil
Shape every bush a hideous shapeless devil.

    Disturb his of rest with restless trances,
Afflict him in his bed with bedrid groans;  975
Let there bechance him pitiful mischances,
To make him moan; but pity not his moans:
Stone him with harden'd hearts, harder than stones;
And let mild women to him lose their mildness,
Wilder him than tigers in their wildness.  980

    Let him have time to tear his curled hair,
Let him have time against himself to rave,
Let him have time of time's help to despair,
Let him have time to live a loathed slave,
Let him have time a beggar's orts to crave,  985
And time to see one that by alms doth live
Disdain to him disdained scraps to give.

    Let him have time to see his friends his foes,
And merry fools to mock at him resort;
Let him have time to mark how slow time goes  990
In time of sorrow, and how swift and short
His time of folly and his time of sport;
And ever let his unrecalling crime
Have time to wail the abusing of his time.

    O Time, thou tutor both to good and bad,  995
Teach me to curse him that thou taugh'st this ill!
At his own shadow let the thief run mad,
Himself himself seek every hour to kill!
Such wretched hands such wretched blood should spill;
For who so base would such an office have  1000
As slanderous deathsman to so base a slave?

    To baser is he, coming from a king,
To shame his hope with deeds degenerate:
The mightier man, the mightier is the thing
That makes him honour'd or begets him hate;  1005
For greatest scandal wait on greatest state.
The moon being clouded presently is miss'd,
But little stars may hide them when they list.

    The crow may bathe his coal-black wings in mire,
And unperceived fly with the filth away;  1010
But if the like snow-white swan desire,
The stain upon his silver down will stay.
Poor grooms are sightless night, kings glorious day:
Gnats are unnoted wheresoe'er they fly,
But eagles gazed upon with every eye.  1015

    Out, idle words, servants to shallow fools!
Unprofitable sounds, weak arbitrators!
Busy yourselves in skill-contending schools;
Debate where leisure serves with dull debaters;
To trembling clients be you mediators:  1020
For me, I force not argument a straw,
Since that my case is past the help of law.

    In vain I rail at Opportunity,
At Time, at Tarquin, and uncheerful Night;
In vain I cavil with mine infamy,  1025
In vain I spurn at my confirm'd despite:
This helpless smoke of words doth me no right.
The remedy indeed to do me good
Is to let forth my foul-defiled blood.

    Poor hand, why quiver'st thou at this decree?  1030
Honour thyself to rid me of this shame;
For if I die, my honour lives in thee,
But if I live, thou livest in my defame:
Since thou couldst not defend thy loyal dame,
And wast afeard to scratch her wicked foe,  1035
Kill both thyself and her for yielding so.»


Third part

    This said, from her be-tumbled couch she starteth,
To find some desperate instrument of death:
But this no slaughterhouse no tool imparteth
To make more vent for passage of her breath;  1040
Which, thronging through her lips, so vanisheth
As smoke from Etna that in air consumes,
Or that which from discharged cannon fumes.

   «In vain», quoth she, «live, and seek in vain
Some happy mean to end a hapless life.  1045
I feared Tarquin's falchion to be slain,
Yet for the self-same purpose seek a knife:
But when I fear'd I was a loyal wife:
So am I now: O no, that cannot be;
Of that true type hath Tarquin rifled me.  1050

    O, that is gone for which I sought to live,
And therefore now I need not fear to die.
To clear this spot by death, at least I give
A badge of fame to slander's livery,
A dying life to living infamy:  1055
Poor helpless help, the treasure stol'n away.
To burn the guiltless casket where it lay!

    Well, well, dear Collatine, thou shalt not know
The stained taste of violated troth;
I will not wrong thy true affection so,  1060
To flatter thee with an infringed oath;
This bastard graff shall never come to growth
He shall not boast who did thy stock pollute
That thou art doting father of his fruit.

    Nor shall he smile at thee in secret thought,  1065
Nor laugh with his companions at thy state;
But thou shalt know thy interest was not bought
Basely with gold, but stol'n from forth thy gate.
For me, I am the mistress of my fate,
And with my trespass never will dispense,  1070
Till life to death acquit my forced offence.

    I will not poison thee with my attaint,
Nor fold my fault in cleanly-coin'd excuses;
My sable ground of sin I will not paint,
To hide the truth of this false night's abuses:  1075
My tongue shall utter all; mine eyes, like sluices,
As from a mountain-spring that feeds a dale,
Shall gust pure streams to purge my impure tale.»

    By this, lamenting Philomel had ended
The well tuned warble of her nightly sorrow,  1080
And solemn night slow sad gait descended
To ugly hell; when, low, the blushing morrow
Lends light to all fair eyes that light will borrow;
But cloudy Lucrece shames herself to see,
And therefore still in night would cloister'd be.  1085

    Revealing day through every canny spies,
And seems to point her out where she sits weeping;
To whom she sobbing speaks: «O eye of eyes,
Why pry'st thou through my window? leave thy peeping:
Mock with thy tickling beams eyes that are sleeping:  1090
Brand not my forehead with thy piercing light,
For day hath nought to do what's done by night.»

    Thus cavils she with every thing she sees:
True grief is fond and testy as a child,
Who wayward once, his mood with nought agrees:  1095
Old woes, not infant sorrows, bear them mild;
Continuance tames the one; the other wild,
Like an unpractised swimmer plunging still
With too much labour drowns for want of skill.

    So she, deep-drenched in a sea of care,  1100
Holds disputation with each thing she views,
And to herself all sorrow doth compare;
No object but her passion's strength renews,
And as one shifts, another straight ensues:
Sometime her grief is dumb and hath no words;  1105
Sometime 'tis mad and too much talk affords.

    The little birds that tune their morning's joy
Make her moans mad with their sweet melody:
For mirth doth search the bottom of annoy;
Sad souls are slain in merry company;  1110
Grief best is pleased with grief's society:
True sorrow then is feelingly sufficed
When with like semblance it is sympathized.

    «Tis double death to drown in ken of shore;
He ten times pines that pines beholding food;  1115
To see the salve doth make the wound ache more;
Great grief grieves most at that would do it good;
Deep woes roll forward like a gentle flood,
Who, being stopp'd the bounding banks o'erflows;
Grief dallied with nor law nor limit knows.»  1120

    «You, mocking birds», quoth she, «your tunes entomb
Within your hollow-swelling feather'd breasts,
And in my hearing be you mute and dumb:
My restless discord loves no stops nor rests;
A woeful hostess brooks not merry guests:  1125
Relish your nimble notes to pleasing ears;
Distress likes dumps when time is kept with tears.

    Come, Philomel, that sing'st of ravishment,
Make thy sad grove in my dishevell'd hair:
As the dank earth weeps at thy languishment,  1130
So I at each sad strain will strain a tear,
And with deep groans the diapason bear;
For burden-wise hum on Tarquin still,
While thou on Tereus descant'st better skill.

    And whiles against a thorn thou bear'st thy part,  1135
To keep thy sharp woes waking, wretched I,
To imitate thee well, against my heart
Will fix a sharp knife, to affright mine eye;
Who, if wink, shall thereon fall and die.
These means, as frets upon an instrument,  1140
Shall tune our heart.strings to true languishment.

    And for, poor bird, thou sing'st not in the day,
As shaming any eye should thee behold,
Some dark deep desert, seated from the way,
That knows not parching heat nor freezing cold,  1145
Will we find out; and there we will unfold
To creatures stern sad tunes, to charge their kinds:
Since men prove beasts, let beasts bear gentle minds.»

    As the poor frighted deer, that stands at goze,
Wildly determining which way to fly,  1150
Or one encompass'd with a winding maze,
That cannot tread the way out readily;
So with herself is she mutiny,
To live or die, which of the twain were better,
When life is shamed and death reproach's debtor.  1155

    «To kill myself», quoth she, «alack, what were it,
But with my body my poor soul's pollution?
They that lose half with greater patience bear it
Than they whose is swallow'd in confusion.
That mother tries a merciless conclusion  1160
Who, having two sweet babes, when death takes one,
Will slay the other and be nurse to one.

    My body or my soul, which was the dearer,
When the one pure, the other made divine?
Whose love of either to myself was nearer,  1165
When both were kept for heaven and Collatine?
Ay me! the bark peel'd from the lofty pine,
His leaves will wither and his sap decay;
So must my soul, her bark being peel'd away.

    Her house is sack'd, her quiet interrupted,  1170
Her mansion batter'd by the enemy;
Her sacred temple spotted, spoil'd, corrupted,
Grossly engirt with daring infamy:
Then let not be call'd impiety,
If in this blemish'd fort I make some hole  1175
Through which I many convey this troubled soul.

    Yet die I will not till my Collatine
Have heard the cause of my untimely death;
That he may vow, in that sad hour of mine,
Revenge on him that made me stop my breath.  1180
My stained blood to Tarquin I'll bequeath.
Which by him tainted shall for him be spent,
And as his due writ in my testament.

    My honour I 'll bequeath unto the knife
That wounds my body so dishonoured.  1185
Tis honour to deprive dishonour'd life;
The one will live, the other being dead:
So of shame's ashes shall my fame be bred;
For in my death I murder shameful scorn:
My shame so dead, mine honour is new-born.  1190

    Dear lord of that dear jewel I have lost,
What legacy shall I bequeath to thee?
My resolution, love, shall be thy boast,
By whose example thou revenged mayst be.
How Tarquin must be used, read it in me:  1195
Myself, thy friend, will kill myself, thy foe,
And, for my sake, serve thou false Tarquin so.

    This brief abridgement of my will I make:
My soul and body to the skies and ground;
My resolution, husband, do thou take;  1200
Mine honour be the knife's that makes my wound;
My shame be his that did my fame confound;
And all my fame that lives disbursed be
To those that live and think no shame of me.

    Thou, Collatine, shalt oversee this will;  1205
How was I overseen that thou shalt see it!
My blood shall wash the slader of mine ill;
My life's foul deed, my life's fair end shall free it.
Faint not, faint heart, but stoutly say "So be it":
Yield to my hand; my hand shall conquer thee:  1210
Thou dead, both die, and both shall victors be.»

    This plot of death when sadly she had laid,
And wiped the brinish pearl from her bright eyes,
With untuned tongue she hoarsely calls her maid,
Whose swift obedience to her mistress hies;  1215
For fleet-wing'd duty with thought's feathers flies.
Poor Lucrece' cheek unto her maid seem so
As winter meads when sun doth melt their snow.

    Her mistress she doth give demure good-morrow,
With soft slow tongue, true mark of modesty,  1220
And sorts a sad look to her lady's sorrow,
For why her face wore sorrow's livery,
But durst not ask of her audaciously
Why her two suns were cloud-eclipsed so,
Nor why her fair cheeks over-wash'd with woe.  1225

    But as the earth doth weep, the sun being set,
Each flower moisten'd like a melting eye,
Even so the maid with swelling drops'gan wet
Her circle eyne, enforced by sympaty
Of those fair suns set in her mistress' sky,  1230
Who in a salt-waved ocean quench their light,
Which makes the maid weep like the dewy night.

    A pretty while these pretty creatures stand,
Like ivory conduits coral cisterns filling:
One justly weeps; the other takes in hand  1235
No cause, but company, of her drops spilling:
Their gentle sex to weep are often willing,
Grieving themselves to guess at other' smarts,
And then they drown their eyes or break their hearts.

    For men have marble, women waxen, minds,  1240
And therefore are they form's as marble will;
The weak oppress'd, the impression of strange kinds
Is form'd in them by force, by fraud, or skill:
Then call then not the authors of their ill,
No more than wax shall be accounted evil  1245
Wherein is stamp'd the semblance of a devil.

    Their smoothness, like a goodly champaign plain,
Lays open all the little worms that creep;
In men, as in a rough-grown grove, remain
Cave-keeping evils that obscurely sleep:  1250
Through crystal walls each little mote will peep:
Though men can cover crimes with bold stern looks,
Poor women's faces are their own faults' books.

    No man inveigh against the withered flower,
But chide rough winter that the flower hath kill'd:  1255
Not that devour'd, but that which doth devour,
Is worthy blame. O, let it not be hild
Poor women's faults, that they are so fulfill'd
With men's abuses: those proud lords to blame
Make weak-made women tenants to their shame.  1260

    The precedent whereof in Lucrece view,
Assail'd by night with circumstances strong
Of present death, and shame that might ensue
By that her death, to do her husband wrong:
Such danger to resistance did belong,  1265
That dying fear through all her body spread;
And who cannot abuse a body dead?

    By this, mild patience did fair Lucrece speak
To the poor counterfeit of her complaining:
«My girl», quoth she, «on what occasion break  1270
Those tears from thee, that down thy cheeks are raining?
If thou dost weep for grief of my sustaining,
Know, gentle wench, it small avails my mood:
If tears could help, mine own would do me good.

    But tell me, girl, when went -and there she stay'd  1275
Till after a deep groan- Tarquin from hence?»
«Madam, ere I was up», replied the maid,
«The more to blame my sluggard negligence:
Yet with the fault I thus far can dispense;
Myself was stirring ere the break of day,  1280
And ere I rose was Tarquin gone away.

    But, lady, if your maid may be so bold,
She would request to know your heaviness.»
«O, peace!» quoth Lucrece: «if it should be told,
The repetition cannot make it less,  1285
For more it is than I can well express:
And that deep torture may be call'd a hell
When more is felt than one hath power to tell.

    Go, get me hither paper, ink and pen:
Yet save that labour, for I have them here.  1290
What should I say? One of my husband's men
Bid thou be ready by and by to bear
A letter to my lord, my love, my dear:
Bid him with speed prepare to carry it;
The cause craves haste and it will soon be writ.»  1295

   Her maid is gone, and she prepares to write,
First hovering o'er the paper with her quill:
Conceit and grief an eager combat fight;
What wit sets down is blotted straight with will;
This is too curious-good, this blunt and ill:  1300
Much like a press of people at the door,
Throng her inventions, which shall go before.

    At last she thus begins: «Thou worthy lord
Of that unworthy wife that greeteth thee,
Health to thy person! next vouchsafe t'afford-  1305
If ever, love, thy Lucrece thou wilt see-
Some present speed to came and visit me.
So, I commend me from our house in grief:
My woes are tedious, though my words are brief.»

    Here folds she up the tenor of her woe,  1310
Her certain sorrow writ uncertainly.
By this short schedule Collatine may know
Her grief, but not her grief's true quality:
She dares not thereof make discovery,
Lest he should hold it her own gross abuse,  1315
Ere she with blood had stain'd excuse.

    Besides, the life and feeling of her passion
She hoards, to spend when he is by to hear her,
When sighs and groans and tears may grace the fashion
Of her disgrace, the better so to clear her  1320
From that suspicion which the world might bear her.
To shun this blot, she would not blot the letter
With words, till action might become them better.

    To see sad sights moves more than hear them told;
For then the eye interprets to the ear  1325
The heavy motion that it doth behold,
When every part a part of woe doth bear.
Tis but a part of sorrow that we hear:
Deep sounds make lesser noise than shallow fords,
And sorrow ebbs, being blown with wind of words.  1330

    Her letter now is seal'd and on it writ
«At Ardea to my lord with more than haste.»
The post attends, and she delivers it,
Charging the sour-faced groom to hie as fast
As lagging fowls before the northern blast:  1335
Speed more than speed but dull and slow she deems:
Extremity still urgeth such extremes.

    The homely villain court'sies to her low,
And blushing on her, with a steadfast eye
Receives the scroll without or yea or no,  1340
And forth with bashful innocence doth hie.
But they whose guilt within their bosoms lie
Imagine every eye beholds their blame;
For Lucrece thought he blush'd to see her shame:

    When, silly groom! God wot, it was defect  1345
Of spirit, life and bold audacity.
Such harmless creatures have a true respect
To talk in deeds, while others saucily
Promise more speed but do it leisurely:
Even so this pattern of the worn-out age  1350
Pawn'd honest looks, but laid no words to gage.

    His kindled duty kindled her mistrust,
That two red fires in both their faces blazed;
She thought he blush'd, as knowing Tarquin's lust
And blushing with him, wistly on him gazed;  1355
Her earnest eye did make him more amazed:
The more she saw the blood his cheeks replenish,
The more she thought he spied in her some blemish.

    But long she thinks till he return again,
And yet the duteous vassal scarce is gone,  1360
The weary time she cannot entertain,
For now 'tis stale to sigh, to weep and groan:
So woe hath wearied woe, moan tired moan,
That she her plaints a little while doth stay,
Pausing for means to mourn some newer way.  1365

    At lasts she calls to mind where hangs a piece
Of skilful painting, made for Priam's Try;
Before the which is drawn the power of Greece,
For Helen's rape the city to destroy,
Threatening cloud-kissing Ilion with annoy  1370
Which the conceited painter drew so proud,
As heaven, it seem'd, to kiss the turrets bow'd.

    A thousand lamentable objects there,
In scorn of nature, art gave lifeless life:
Many a dry drop seem'd a weeping tear,  1375
Shed for the slaughter'd husband by the wife:
The red blood reeked to show the painter's strife;
And dying eyes gleam'd forth their ashy lights,
Like dying coals burnt out in tedious nights.

    There might you see the labouring pioneer  1380
Begrimed with sweat and smeared all with dust;
And from the towers of Troy there would appear
The very eyes of men through loop-holes thrust,
Gazing upon the Greeks with little lust:
Such sweet observance in this work was had  1385
That one might see those far-off eyes look sad.

    In great commanders grace and majesty
You might behold, triumphing in their faces,
In youth, quick bearing and dexterity;
And here and there the painter interlaces  1390
Pale cowards, marching on with trembling paces;
Which heartless peasants did so well resemble
That one would swear he saw them quake and tremble.

    In Ajax and Ulysses, O, what art
Of physiognomy might one behold!  1395
The face of either cipher'd either's heart;
Their face their manners most expressly told:
In Ajax' eyes blunt rage and rigour roll'd;
But the mild glance that sly Ulysses lent
Show'd deep regard and smiling government.  1400

    There pleading might you see grave Nestor stand,
As 'twere encouraging the Greeks to fight,
Making such sober action with his hand
That it beguiled attention, charm'd the sight:
In speech, it seem'd, his beard all silver white  1405
Wagg'd up and down, and from his lips did fly
Thin winding breath which purl'd up to the sky.

    About him were a press of gaping faces,
Which seem'd to swallow up his sound advice;
All jointly listening, but with several graces,  1410
As it some mermaid did their ears entice,
Some high, some low, the painter was so nice;
The scalps of many, almost hid behind,
To jump up higher seem'd, to mock the mind.

    Here one man's hand lean'd on another's head,  1415
His nose being shadow'd by his neighbour's ear;
Here one being throng'd bears back, all boll'n and red;
Another smother'd seems to pelt and swear;
And in their rage suchs signs of rage they bear
As, but for loss of Nestor's golden words,  1420
It seem'd they would debate with angry swords.


Fourth part

    For much imaginary work was there;
Conceit deceitful, so compact, so kind,
That for Achilles' image stood his spear
Griped in an armed hand; himself behind  1425
Was left unseen, save to the eye of mind:
A hand, a foot, a face, a leg, a head,
Stood for the whole to be imagined.

    And from the walls of strong-besieged Troy
When their brave hope, bold Hector, march'd to field,  1430
Stood many Trojan mothers sharing joy
To see their youthful sons bright weapons wield;
And to they hope they such odd action yield
That through their light joy seemed to appear,
Like bright things stain'd, a kind of heavy fear.  1435

    And from the strand of Dardan, where they fought,
To Simois' reedy banks the red blood ran,
Whose wawes to initate the battle saught
With swelling ridges; and their ranks began
To break upon the galled shore, and then  1440
Retire again, till meeting greater ranks
They join and shoot their foam at Simois' banks.

    To this well-painted piece is Lucrece come,
To find a face where all distress is stell'd.
Many she sees where cares have carved some,  1445
But none where all distress and dolour dwell'd,
Till she despairing Hecuba beheld,
Staring on Priam's wounds with her old eyes,
Which bleeding under Pyrrhus' proud foot lies.

    In her the painter had anatomised  1450
Time's ruin, beauty's wreck, and grim care's reign:
Her cheeks with chaps and wrinkles were disguised;
Of what she was no semblance did remain:
Her blue blood changed to black in every vein,
Wanting the spring that those shrunk pipes had fed,  1455
Show'd life imprison'd in a body dead.

    On this sad shadow Lucrece spends her eyes,
And shapes her sorrow to the beldam's woes,
Who nothing wants to answer her but cries,
And bitter words to ban her cruel foes:  1460
The painter was no god to lend her those;
And therefore Lucrece swears he did her wrong,
To give her so much grief and not a tongue.

    «Poor instrument», quoth she, «without a sound,
I 'll tune thy woes with my lamenting tongue,  1465
And drop sweet balm in Priam's painted wound,
And rail on Pyrrhus that hath done him wrong,
And with my tears quench Troy that burns so long,
And with my knife scratch out the angry eyes
Of all the Greeks that are thine enemies.  1470

    Show me the strumpet that began this stir,
That with my nails her beauty I may tear.
Thy heat of loust, fond Paris, did incur
This load of wrath that burning Troy doth bear:
Thy eye kindley the fire that burneth here;  1475
And here in Troy, for trespass of thine eye,
The sire, the son, the dame and daughter die.

    Why should the private pleasure of some one
Become the public plague of many moe?
Let sin, alone committed, light alone  1480
Upon his head that hath transgressed so;
Let guiltless souls be freed from guilty woe:
For one's offence why should so many fall,
To plague a private sin in general?

    Lo, here weeps Hecuba, here Priam dies,  1485
Here manly Hector faints, here Troilus swounds,
Here friend by friend in bloody channel lies,
And friend to friend gives unadvised wounds,
And one man's lust these many lives confounds:
Had doting Priam check'd his son's desire,  1490
Troy had been bright with fame and not with fire.»

    Here feelingly she weeps Troy's painter woes:
For sorrow, like a heavy-hanging bell
Once set on ringing, with his own weight goes;
Then little strength rings out the doleful knell:  1495
So Lucrece, set a-work, sad tales doth tell
To pencill'd pensiveness and colour'd sorrow;
She lends them works, and she their looks doth borrow.

    She throws her eyes about the painting round,
And who she finds forlorn she doth lament.  1500
At last she sees a wretched image bound,
That piteous looks to Phrygian shepherds lent:
His face, though full of cares, yet show'd content;
Onward to Troy with the blunt swains he goes,
So mild that Patience seem'd to scorn his woes.  1505

    In him the painter labour'd with his skill
To hide deceit and give the harmless show
An humble gait, calm looks, eyes wailing still.
A brow unbent, that seem'd to welcome woe;
Cheeks neither red nor pale, but mingled so  1510
That blushing red no guilty instance gave,
Nor ashy pale the fear that false hearts have.

    But, like a constant and confirmed devil,
He entertain'd a show so seeming just,
And therein so ensconced his secret evil,  1515
That jealousy itself could not mistrust
False-creeping craft and perjury should thrust
Into so bright a day such black-faced storms,
Or blot with hell-born sin such saint-like forms.

    The well-skill'd workman this mild image drew  1520
For perjure Sinon, whose enchanting story
The credulous old Priam after slew;
Whose works, like wildfire, burnt the shining glory
Of rich-built Ilion, that the skies were sorry,
And little stars shot from their fixed places,  1525
When their glass fell wherein they view'd their faces.

    This picture she advisedly perused,
And chid the painter for his wondrous skill,
Saying, some shape in Sinon's was abused;
So fair a form lodged not a mind so ill:  1530
And still on him she gazed, and gazing still
Such signs of truth in his plain face she spied
That she concludes the picture was belied.

    «It cannot be» quoth she, «that so much guile.»
She would have said «can lurk in such a look»;  1535
But Tarquin's shape came in her mind the while,
And from her tongue «can lurk» from «cannot» took:
«It cannot be» she in that sense forsook,
And turn'd it thus, «It cannot be, I find,
But such a face should bear a wicked mind:  1540

    For even as subtle Sinon here is painted,
So sober-sad, so weary and so mild,
As if with grief or travail he had fainted,
To me came Tarquin armed: so beguiled
With outward honesty, but yet defiled  1545
With inward vice: as Priam him did cherih,
So did I Tarquin; so my Troy dir perish.

    Look, look, how listening Priam wets his eyes,
To see those borrow'd tears that Sinon sheds!
Priam, why art thou old and yet not wise?  1550
For every tear he falls a Trojan bleeds:
His eye drops fire, no water thence proceeds;
Those round clear pearls of his that move thy pity
Are balls of quenchless fire to burn thy city.

    Such devils steal effects from lightless hell;  1555
For Sinon in his fire doth quake with cold,
And in that cold hot-burning fire doth dwell;
These contraries such unity do hold,
Only to flatter fools and make them bold:
So Priam's trust false Sinon's tears dot flatter,  1560
That he finds means to burn his Troy with water.»

    Here, all enraged, such passion her assails,
That patience is quite beaten from her breast.
She tears the senseless Sinon with her nails,
Comparing him to that unhappy guest  1565
Whose deed hath made herself herself detest:
At last she smilingly with this gives o'er;
«Fool, fool» quot she, «his wounds will not be sore.»

    Thus ebbs and flows the current of her sorrow,
And time doth weary time with her complaining.  1570
She look for night, and then she longs for morrow,
And both she thinks too long with her remaining:
Short time seems long in sorrow's sharp sustaining:
Though woe be heavy, yet it seldom sleeps,
And they that watch see time how snow it creeps.  1575

    Which all this time hath overslipp'd her thought,
That he with painted images hath spent;
Being from the feeling of her own grief brought
By deep surmise of other's detriment,
Losing her woes in shows of discontent.  1580
It easeth some, though none it ever cured,
To think their dolour others have endured.

    But now the mindful messenger come back
Bring home his lord and other company;
Who finds his Lucrece clad in mourning black:  1585
And round about her tear-distained eye
Blue circles stream'd, like rainbows in the sky:
These water-galls in her dim element
Foretell new storms to those already spent.

    Wich when her sad-beholding husband saw;  1590
Amazedly in her sad face he stares:
Her eyes, though sod in tears, look'd red and raw,
Her lively colour kill'd with deadly cares.
He hath no power to ask her how she fares:
Both stood, like old acquaintance in a trance,  1595
Met far from home, wondering each other's chance.

    At last he takes her by the bloodless hand,
And thus begins: «What uncouth ill event
Hath thee befall'n, that thou dost trembling stand?
Sweet love, what spite hath thy fair colour spent?  1600
Why art thou thus attired in discontent?
Unmask, dear dear, this moody heaviness,
And tell thy grief, that we may give redress.»

    Three times with sight she gives her sorrow fire,
Ere once she can discharge one word of woe:  1605
At length adress'd to ansver his desire,
She modestly prepares to let them know
Her honour is ta'en prisoner by the foe;
While Collatine and his consorted lords
With sad attention long to hear her works.  1610

    And now this pale swan in her watery nest
Begins the sad dirge of her certain ending:
«Few words», quot she, «shall fit the trespass best,
Where no excuse can give the fault amending:
In me moe woes than words are now depending;  1615
And my laments would be drawn out too long,
To tell them all with one poor tired tongue.

    Then be this all the task it hath to say:
Dear husband, in the interest of thy bed
A stranger came, and on that pillow lay  1620
Where thou wast wont to rest thy weary head;
And what wrong else may be imagined
By foul enforcement might be done to me,
From that, alas, thy Lucrece is not free.

    For in the dreadful dead of dark midnight,  1625
With shining falchion in my chamber came
A creeping creature, with a flaming light,
And softly cried "Awake, thou Roman dame,
And entertain my love; else lasting same
On thee and thine this night I will inflict,  1630
If thou my love's desire do contradict."

    "For some hard-favour'd groom of thine", quoth he,
"Unless thou yoke thy liking to my will,
I'll murder straight, and then I 'll slaughter thee,
And swear I found you where you did fulfil  1635
The loathsome act of lust, and so did kill
The lechers in their deed: this act will be
My fame, and thy perpetual infamy."

    With this, I did begin to start and cry;
And then against my heart he set his sword,  1640
Swaring, unless I took all patiently,
I should not live to speak another word;
So should my shame still rest upon record,
And never be forgot in mighty Rome
The adulterate death of Lucrece and her groom.  1645

    Mine enemy was strong, mi poor self weak,
And far the weaker with so strong a fear:
My bloody judge forbade my tongue to speak;
No rightful plea might plead for justice there:
His scarlet lust came evidence to swear  1650
That my poor beauty had purloin'd his eyes;
And when the judge is robb'd, the prisoner dies.

    O, teach me how to make mine own excuse!
Or, at the least, this refuge let me find;
Though my gross blood be stain'd with this abuse,  1655
Immaculate and spotless is my mind;
That was not forced; that never was inclined
To accessary yieldings, but still pure
Doth in her poison'd closet yet endure.»

   Lo, here, the hopeless merchant of this loss,  1660
With head declined, and voice damm'd up with woe,
With sad-set eyes and wretched arms across,
From lips new-waxen pale begins to blow
The grief away that stop his answer so:
But, wretched as he is, he strives in vain;  1665
What he breathes out his breath drinks up again.

    As through an arch the violent roaring tide
Outruns the eye that doth behold his haste,
Yet in the eddy boundeth in his pride
Back to the strait that forced him on so fast,  1670
In rage sent out, recall'd in rage, being past:
Even so his sight, his sorrow, make a saw,
To push grief on and back the same grief draw.

    Which speechless woe of his poor she attendeth
And his untimely frenzy thus awaketh:  1675
«Dear lord, thy sorrow to my sorrow lendeth
Another power; no flood by raining slaketh,
My woe too sensible thy passion maketh,
More feeling-painful: let it then suffice
To drown one woe, one pair of weeping eyes.  1680

    And for my sake, when I might charm thee so,
For she that was thy Lucrece, now attend me:
Be suddenly reverged on my foe,
Thine, mine, his own: suppose thou dost defend me
From what is past: the help that thou shalt lend me  1685
Comes all too late, yet let the traitor die;
For sparing justice feeds iniquity.

    But ere I name him, you fair lords», quoth she,
«Speaking to those that came with Collatine,
Shall plight your honourable faiths to me,  1690
With swift pursuit to venge this wrong of mine;
For 'tis a meritorious fair design
To chase injustice with revengeful arms:
Knights, by their oaths, should right poor ladies' harms.»

    At this request, with noble disposition  1695
Each present lord began to promise aid,
As bound in knighthood to her imposition,
Longing to hear the hateful foe bewray'd.
Bt she, that yet her sad task hath not said,
The protestation stops. «O, speak», quoth she  1700
«How may this forced stain be wiped from me?

    What is the quality of my offence,
Being constrain'd with dreadful circumstance?
May my pure mind with the foul act dispense,
My low-declined honour to advance?  1705
May any terms acquit me from this chance?
The poison'd fountain clears itself again;
And why not I from this compelled stain?»

    With this, they all at once began to say,
Het body's stain her mind untainted clears;  1710
While with a joyless smile she turns away
The face, that map which deep impression bears
Of hard misfortune, carved in it with tears.
«No, no», quoth she, «no dame hereafter living
By my excuse shall claim excuse's giving.»  1715

    Here with a sigh, as if her heart would break,
She throws forth Tarquin's name: «He, he», she says,
But more than «he» her poor tongue could not speak;
Till after many accents and delays,
Untimely breathings, sick and short assays,  1720
She utters this: «He, he, fair lords, 'tis he,
That guides this hand to give this wound to me.»

    Even here she sheathed in her harmless breast
A harmful knife, that thence her soul unsheathed:
That blow did bail if from the deep unrest  1725
Of that polluted prison where it breathed:
Her contrite sight unto the clouds bequeathed
Her winged sprite, and through her wounds doth fly
Life's lasting date from cancell'd destiny.

    Stone-still, astonish'd with this deadly deep,  1730
Stood Collatine and all his lordly crew;
Till Lucrece' father, that beholds her bleed,
Himself on her self-slaughtered body threw;
And from the purple fountain Brutus drew
The murderous knife, and, as it left the place,  1735
Her blood, in poor revenge, held it in chase;

    And bubbling from her breast, it doth divide
In two slow rivers, that the crimson blood
Circles her body in on every side,
Who, like a late-sack'd island, vastly stood  1740
Bare and unpeopled in this fearful flood.
Some of her blood still pure and red remain'd,
And some look'd black, and that false Tarquin stain'd.

    About the mourning and congealed face
Of that black blood a watery rigol goes,  1745
Which seems to weep upon the tainted place:
And ever since, as pitying Lucrece' woes,
Corrupted blood some watery token shows;
And blood untainted still doth red abide,
Blushing at that which is so putrified.  1750

    «Daughter, dear daughter», old Lucretius cries,
«That life was mine which thou hast here deprived.
If in the child the father's image lies,
Where shall I live now Lucrece is unlived?
Thou wast not to this end from me derived.  1755
If children pre-decease progenitors,
We are their offspring, and they none of ours.

    Poor broken glass, I often did behold
In thy sweet semblance my old age new born:
But now that fair fresh mirror, dim and old,  1760
Shows me a bare-boned death by time outworn:
O, from thy cheeks my image thou hast torn,
And shiver'd all the beauty of my glass,
That I no more can see what once I was.

    O, time, cease thou thy course and last no longer,  1765
If they surcease to be that should survive.
Shall rotten death make conquest of the stronger,
And leave the faltering feeble souls alive?
The old bess die, the young posses their hive:
Then live, sweet Lucrece, live again, and see  1770
Thy father die, and not the father thee!»

    By this, starts Collatine as from a dream,
And bids Lucretius give his sorrow place;
And then in key-cold Lucrece' bleeding stream
He falls, and bathes the pale fear in his face,  1775
And counterfeits to die with her a space;
Till manly shame bids him posses his breath,
And live to be revenged on her death.

    The deep vexation of his inwar soul
Hath served a dumb arrest upon his tongue;  1780
Who, mad that sorrow should his use control
Or keep him from heart-easing words so long,
Begins to talk; but through his lips do throng
Weak words, so thick come in his poor heart's aid
That no man could distinguish what he said.  1785

    Yet sometime «Tarquin» was pronounced plain,
But through his teeth, as if the name he tore.
This windy tempest, till it blow up rain,
Held back his sorrow's tide, to make it more;
At last rains, and busy winds give o'er:  1790
Then son and father weep with equal strife
Who should weep most, for daughter or for wife.

    The one doth call her his, the other his,
Yet neither may possess the claim the lay.
The father say «She's mine.» «O, mine she is»,  1795
Replies her husband: «do not take away
My sorrow's interest; let no mourner say
He weeps for her, for she was only mine,
And only must be wail'd by Collatine.»

    «O», quoth Lucretius, «I did give that life  1800
Which she too early and too late hath spill'd.»
«Woe, woe», quoth Collatine, «she was my wife;
I owed her, and 'tis mine that she hath kill'd.»
«My daughter» and «my wife» with clamours fill'd
The dispersed air, who, holding Lucrece' life,  1805
Answer'd their cries, «my daughter» and «my wife»

    Brutus, who pluck'd the knife from Lucrece' side,
Seeing such emulation in their woe,
Began to clothe his wit in state and pride,
Burying in Lucrece' wound his folly's show.  1810
He with the Romans was esteemed so
As silly-jeering idiots are with kings,
For sportive words and uttering foolish things:

    But now he throws that shallow habit by
Wherein deep policy did him disguise,  1815
And arm's his long-hid wits advisedly
To cheek the tears in Collatine' eyes.
«Thou wronged lord of Roma», quoth he, «arise:
Let my unsounded self, supposed a fool,
Now set thy long-experienced wit to school.  1820

    Why, Collatine, is woe the cure for woe?
Do wounds help wounds, or grief help grievous deeds?
Is it revenge to give thyself a blow
For his foul act by whom thy fair wife bleeds?
Such childish humour from weak minds proceeds:  1825
Thy wretched wife mistook the matter so,
To slay herself, that should have slain her foe.

    Courageous Roman, do not steep thy heart
In such releting dew of lamentations,
But kneel with me and help to bear thy part  1830
To rouse our Roman gods with invocations,
That they will suffer these abominations,
Since Rome herself in them doth stand disgraced,
By our strong arms from forth her fair streets chased.

    Now, by the Capitol that we adore,  1835
And by this chaste blood so injustly stained,
By heaven's fair sun that breeds the fat earth's store,
By all our country rights in Rome maintained,
And by chaste Lucrece' soul that late complained
Her wrongs to us, and by this bloody knife,  1840
We will revenge the death of this true wife.»

    This said, he struck his hand upon his breast,
And kiss'd te fatal knife, to end his wow,
And to his protestation urgend the rest,
Who, jointly to the ground their kness they bow;  1845
Then jointly to the ground their kness they bow;
And that deep vow, which Brutus made before,
He doth again repeat, and that they swore.

    When they had sworn to his advised doom,
They did conclude ti bear dear Lucrece thence  1850
To show her bleeding body thorough Rome,
And so to publish Tarquin's fould offence:
Which being done with speedy diligence,
The Romans plausibly did give consent
To Tarquin's everlasting banishment.  1855

 
 
THE END OF POEM «The rape of Lucrece»
 
 





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